Mr Perceptive
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- David
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Its ok, give me 20 mins and I'll have talked myself out of it - the first of many cyclic loops.........Just get it ordered. If it’s late then cancel it.
Its ok, give me 20 mins and I'll have talked myself out of it - the first of many cyclic loops.........Just get it ordered. If it’s late then cancel it.
Talking of Lenses
GF63 f2.8
New focus motor
Its ok, give me 20 mins and I'll have talked myself out of it - the first of many cyclic loops.........
You'll soon be converted to zooms...it's a slippery slope.
Just pulled the trigger on a secong 50S from Fuji ReiFurb had to really given the fact that they are out of production and I don't like any of the newer ones (no tilt adapter).
Very happy with the price, less than 3 others I looked at second hand from dealers.And at an excellent priceand a lot of refurb GFX glass in stock at the refurb store as well.


Looking forward to seeing results from your trips before I start thinking of shifting my 23mm for the 20-35mm which would be very nice but my 45-100 is my main lens.20-35 pre-ordered. I've been waiting for this lens for what seems like an age.
Thank you for pointing that out.Biggest weakness of gfx is lack of either leaf shutters or global shutter. X-sync speed is very limiting, more so than any 50-60mp FX bodies. That's where hasselblad rules supreme sadly well out of my price range.
At the end of the day FX to gfx is smaller step up in sensor size than apsc to fx, and 4:3 ratio sort of gets wasted a little for many images as I would use 2:3 to 5:7 on most occasions
Biggest weakness of gfx is lack of either leaf shutters or global shutter. X-sync speed is very limiting, more so than any 50-60mp FX bodies. That's where hasselblad rules supreme sadly well out of my price range.
At the end of the day FX to gfx is smaller step up in sensor size than apsc to fx, and 4:3 ratio sort of gets wasted a little for many images as I would use 2:3 to 5:7 on most occasions
Clearly outdoors in daylight, and same for interiors. I hate what hss does to flash output levelsWhat situations are you thinking of that it could be a problem?
Gfx 100s 11648px 44mm long edge
A7riv 9504px 36mm
Gfx has 22.5% more of each, and obviously considerably more in vertical direction. It appears to be pretty much the same sensor in a larger size.
A7RIV has considerably faster frame rate, x-sync and af tracking. A1 goes well beyond on these specs.
Considering price range these are the specs to weigh up against each other and I would guess in an ideal world you would have one or two of each. I wonder if Sony plays well with gfx lenses and vice versa
Gfx 100s 11648px 44mm long edge
A7riv 9504px 36mm
Gfx has 22.5% more of each, and obviously considerably more in vertical direction. It appears to be pretty much the same sensor in a larger size.
Centre to edge sharpness - design of the larger image circle, less vingetting.Flange distance stops you mounting E-mount on GFX - and what benefits do you perceive if you could mount GF glass onto E-mount??
Centre to edge sharpness - design of the larger image circle, less vingetting.
I think you will either really like this or hate this, or perhaps a bit of both. You won't be too short on pixels either way.For landscapes I find the 4:3 aspect ratio very pleasing. I tend to crop my D850 files 4:3 or 5:4. So with this system there is less wastage here.
Global shutter will just happen when Sony upgrades their sensor tech. It's probably a few years out. It will change a lot of things in a big wayThe need for leaf and global shutters is a narrower one than the need for weather sealed zooms
Yes. But isn't it the first on of the kind? Hasselblad doesn't have anything like it. Most in fact are just a few primes. Maybe it was difficult to design or required some novel glass materialThe bigger question is what took them so long with the 20-35 - they should have had that out ASAP.
I don’t often face these situations that need flash faster than 1/125. As it happens, I’m on holidays and have the 50R with me with an ND8 which had been fine for a few portraits that needed some fill flash and a wider aperture than 1/125 allows.Clearly outdoors in daylight, and same for interiors. I hate what hss does to flash output levels
If you have a set I think you would not mind being able to use it on Sony body. Besides I suspect it might open doors to tilt and s*** adaptersFlange distance stops you mounting E-mount on GFX - and what benefits do you perceive if you could mount GF glass onto E-mount??
Well yes, but its not like Sony's G-master glass is bad though, is it?
I think you will either really like this or hate this, or perhaps a bit of both. You won't be too short on pixels either way.
Global shutter will just happen when Sony upgrades their sensor tech. It's probably a few years out. It will change a lot of things in a big way
Yes. But isn't it the first on of the kind? Hasselblad doesn't have anything like it. Most in fact are just a few primes. Maybe it was difficult to design or required some novel glass material
I needed well over 1/1000s last couple of times outdoors. At f/2.8 things are really bright with any daytime sun around. If I have to use an ND I would much prefer it were no more than 3-4 stops, or ideally just a CPL rather than 10 stoppers.I don’t often face these situations that need flash faster than 1/125. As it happens, I’m on holidays and have the 50R with me with an ND8 which had been fine for a few portraits that needed some fill flash and a wider aperture than 1/125 allows.
The expectation here is that it performs almost in line with 23mm prime, and sample variation in the corners can't be as bad as your average canon EF wideangle zoom.Pentax 28-45 came years before, ok this is a lot wider, and yes first of its kind. But for landscapes, which remain the most popular genre of photography by hobbyists they needed this lens. I'll be curious to see how it performs, that will be a big thing if it's good and a wallet saving thing if it's not.
The expectation here is that it performs almost in line with 23mm prime, and sample variation in the corners can't be as bad as your average canon EF wideangle zoom.
This is where you can make or break your reputation and that is the difficult part with such a high end system. That probably delayed things till now.
Thanks to this forum I was made aware of what a leaf shutter and global shutter are.For those who don't know what Global shutters are and how they work compared to your rolling shutter - here's a breakdown.
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What is a global shutter – and why is it so important?
Global shutters enable cameras to read the whole sensor in one go, which helps prevent issues with rolling shutterwww.digitalcameraworld.com
Thanks to this forum I was made aware of what a leaf shutter and global shutter are.
These are missing in allbutthemosthigh end or recent Canon/Nikon/Sony FF bodies.
So those upgrading to Fuji MF will not miss it much less look for it.
right, well I took a cpl with me too haha. reflectors are also an option.I needed well over 1/1000s last couple of times outdoors. At f/2.8 things are really bright with any daytime sun around. If I have to use an ND I would much prefer it were no more than 3-4 stops, or ideally just a CPL rather than 10 stoppers.
Interior job usually is contained within 1/160s at ISO 160 f/9-11 but with unfortunate conditions that negate dealing with sun specular highlights (which by the way are an order of magnitude brighter than the windows) on the floor and furniture You face either dragging out full AD600s (big inconvenience considering available space in most cases) and really closing down the aperture, or dealing with it by waiting it out, or using very unconventional methods neither of which is ideal.
In theory, when global shutters become available on MILC MF, FF & APS-C would this negate the need for a leaf shutter?Corrected this for you. There are no consumer cameras with global shutters - it will come but realistically it probably a few years away.
Basic on location portrait / product / fashion photography. Light is pretty bright and usually not really suitable in itself for portrait during the daywhat are you shooting that needs 1/1000th, f2.8 and flash outdoors' If it something fast moving then most light the AF systems of MF cameras won't be up to it either.
Correct. But it goes well beyond that.In theory, when global shutters become available on MILC MF, FF & APS-C would this negate the need for a leaf shutter?
I am starting to see Fuji's long term MF plans.Basic on location portrait / product / fashion photography. Light is pretty bright and usually not really suitable in itself for portrait during the day
Correct. But it goes well beyond that.
MF without global shutter may drop to $2.5k price point before year 2030.